COTs Still Bearish
Energy Stocks

Is the market bloodbath over? Are energy stocks back on
solid ground, or are we in the middle of a sucker trap?

The doomsday talk has quieted down a little, and most of the
energy sector has staged a sweet little recovery since the August lows. That’s
of course with the exception of natural gas, off fully 30 percent since June.

In times of turbulence like these, many analysts and traders
turn for guidance to the Commitments of Traders reports issued by the U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission. This valuable government data lists
trillions of dollars in futures and options holdings of many of the world’s
largest traders—commodity producers (the so-called “smart money” insiders, who often
have the next market information), investment firms and hedge funds (usually, the
wrong-way “dumb money” traders) and the small fry folks like you and me (also
usually positioned badly).

So what did the latest COTs report—issued August 31 and
based on data as of Aug. 28— have to say about energy markets? The traders I
follow remain bearish on energy stocks and neutral on crude oil and natural
gas. They are also bearish the Canadian dollar—the world’s leading
petro-currency—and U.S. dollar index.

Friday’s data also didn’t show any historic extremes of
positioning that would have given me a new or renewed signal in any of these
markets. (See the table below for more details and my free blog
COTsTimer.Blogspot.com to learn more about how my system works.)

There were, of course, some interesting, smaller
fluctuations in the latest data. You’ll often read about such minor COTs position
changes in media reports. But anyone who’s tested the correlation of the
week-to-week changes with price movements can tell you there’s virtually
nothing tradable there. It’s not like lots of smart folks haven’t tried to find
a connection. But many years of such attempts have been fruitless.

Extreme Positions

I think the key to understanding the COTs data, as authors
like Larry Williams have suggested, is to look for the points when traders hit
extremes that suggest a new trend is imminent. Let’s say the “smart money”
commercials are building historic net long positions in crude week after week.
That may suggest crude is about to take off.

Most traders say the COTs data is best used a guidepost to
possible market action, but they suggest timing trades requires other tools
like technical analysis. I found that’s not so.

My own twist on this data was to backtest the specific
historic extremes that led to tradable opportunities. I then subjected those
setups to statistical testing to see if we could have confidence that the
market-beating profitability of those results wasn’t due just to chance.

I also tested not just the commercials—the traders most
analysts watch—but also the large specs and small traders to see which were
really the best to follow. I was surprised to see that in some markets—for
example, natural gas—it was actually best to trade on the same side as the large specs and small traders.

In every market I’ve examined using this approach, I found a
setup that gave superior, statistically robust results. Buy and sell signals
came from a combination of moving averages and standard deviations to identify
tradable extreme points in trader positioning.

Other Highlights

Some other highlights from the Aug. 31 COTs report:

-
Crude oil: Large specs—whom I fade in this
market—have been reducing their net long percentage-of-open-interest position
for four weeks and have now adopted a fairly bearish tilt compared to recent
historic data. They’re still not extreme enough, however, to reverse my
existing neutral signal. (See note 10 for more info on this setup.)

-
Energy stocks: The
commercials—whom I follow for Oil Services Holders and the Canadian Energy iUnits
ETF (XEG)—are leaning more and more bullish, though again not enough yet to
reverse my short signal here.

-
Natural gas:
Large specs—the “smart money” in this market, believe it or not—have reduced
their net short percentage-of-open-interest position for four weeks. However,
they remain highly bearish, having just given 13 consecutive bearish signals
according to my setup for natural gas. Thus, I remain neutral. (See note 13 for
more info on this setup.)

For my COTs signals in equities, financials and other
commodities and currencies and to see how my system works, visit my free blog
at COTsTimer.Blogspot.com. Good luck in your trading and investing.

NOTES TO TABLES

Visit COTsTimer.Blogspot.com to see how I trade new signals.

A "renewed" signal is when a market is already on a buy or sell signal, and traders again register an extreme net trading position in the same direction. The results in this table are based on acting only on new signals.

The COTs Timer Ratio is my reading of the bullishness or bearishness of traders from the latest COTs report. A reading of 1 or more means a buy signal for the commercial traders or a sell for the large specs and small traders. A reading of -1 or less means a sell for the commercials or a buy for the large specs and small traders. The ratio is based on the traders' net percentage-of-open-interest position compared to the position's moving average divided by the number of standard deviations I use for this setup.

In parentheses are the dates of the COTs report that gave this signal.

Past return using the signals of my COTs Timer system, starting from a baseline 100. This is the theoretical return from buying the security on a buy signal and shorting it on a sell signal.

Past return from buying and holding the underlying cash market, starting from a baseline of 100.

Ratio of the COTs Timer return versus the underlying market's return.

Largest past drawdown the setup experienced during a trading signal between the entry price and the lowest price. This was not necessarily the loss at the end of the trade. I use this figure to calculate my maximum portfolio allocation for the setup based on my 2-percent risk threshold of total assets for any one trade.

The group of traders that had the best historic return in this market. My signals are given when this group reaches specific extreme levels of bullishness or bearishness. Unless otherwise noted, my system trades in the same direction as the commercials and fades the large speculators and small traders.

All signals are based on the combined futures-and-options COTs data (except for the U.S. dollar index and Canadian dollar). Results for the crude oil setup are based on following the buy signals or being in cash during a sell signal (not being short). No combination of signal rules resulted in a profitable short side of this trade. The win/loss number doesn't include 16 occasions when the setup was in cash.

Signals for the Oil Service Holders ETF (symbol OIH) are based on a setup correlated to the light sweet crude oil COTs data. OIH price data available only since March 2001.

Signals for the S&P/TSE Canadian Energy iUnits ETF (symbol XEG.TO) are based on a setup correlated to the light sweet crude oil COTs data. XEG.TO price data available only since March 2001.

Results for the natural gas setup are based on following the buy signals or being in cash during a sell signal (not being short). No combination of signal rules resulted in a profitable short side of this trade. The win/loss number doesn't include six times when the setup was in cash. This setup is based on trading on the same side as the large specs-not the usual practice of fading this group.

Signals for the U.S. Dollar Index are based on the futures-only COTs data since Sept. 1992.

Signals for the Canadian Dollar are based on the futures-only COTs data since Sept. 1992.

Disclaimer
This report isn't meant as financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Please do your own homework before trading. My system isn't for everyone, involves substantial risk and has experienced large drawdowns in some past trades. Past results are no guarantee of future profits. I'm not a certified financial advisor. While I consider my information to be reliable and accurate, I make no guarantees. Please see COTsTimer.Blogspot.com for other disclaimer information.